Studies of seafloor geomorphology across various spatial ... · Outline • Applications of...

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Studies of seafloor geomorphology across various spatial scales in Antarctica

Jodie Smith

Outline • Applications of bathymetry data and seafloor geomorphology

information

• Examples across different spatial scales:

• Continental Scale – Marine Protected Areas in East Antarctica

• Regional Scale – Vulnerable Marine Ecosystems in George V Land

• Local Scale – Davis (Vestfold Hills) and Casey (Windmill Islands) stations

• Current and Future work

• Cape Darnley study with NIPR

• Geoscience Australia activities this season (16/17)

• Australia’s new icebreaker

Applied Science Bathymetry and Seafloor Geomorphology used for: • Scientific research:

- understanding oceanography - identifying benthic habitats - informing paleoclimate studies - understanding past ice sheet dynamics

• Marine environmental management: - development of Marine Protected Areas - identify vulnerable habitats

• Logistical requirements: - updating nautical charts

• Very little detailed bathymetry coverage in East Antarctica

• Mostly single beam

• Exceptions: • Mertz-George V Land (1) • Nearshore surveys at

Casey (2) and Davis (3) • Totten Glacier (NSF

Palmer) (4) • MacRobertson Land/Cape

Darnley (5)

Bathymetry coverage around Antarctic continental margin

IBCSO v1 (Arndt et al 2013)

1

2

3

4

5

CONTINENTAL SCALE

Representative system of Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) in East Antarctica

• Proposal: submitted by Australia-France-EU, currently under consideration by Antarctic Marine conservation body (CCAMLR)

• Aim: Protect vulnerable pelagic and benthic ecosystems from disruption and disturbance (e.g. fishing)

• Proposed for pelagic and benthic values

Proposed MPAs for East Antarctica

• Defined using physical and biological datasets:

• pelagic

• benthic (video, seafloor substrate, bathymetry, geomorphology)

6000 3000 0 5000 4000 2000 1000

How well do MPAs represent bathymetry?

Depth (m)

All East Antarctica

MPAs

frequ

ency

fre

quen

cy

Seabed morphology

O’Brien et al., 2009

World Hydrography Day 2016

How well do MPAs represent geomorphic features?

Abyssal plain

Coastal terrane Iceshelf cavity

Lower slope

Plateau slope

Rough seafloor

Shelf bank

Shelf deep

Upper slope

21%

64% 59%

42%

38%

0.1%

51% 63%

39%

REGIONAL SCALE

Vulnerable Marine Ecosystems on George V Shelf

• Hydrocoral communities identified during CEAMARC survey 2007/8

• Protected as Vulnerable Marine Ecosystems (VMEs) in 2009

• Can we predict their location elsewhere?

• Analysed physical datasets (bathymetry, geomorphology, substrate, ocean currents, iceberg scouring)

• Predicted to occur:

• Below iceberg keel depth limits (600-950 m)

• Influence of dense bottom water – rich in organic matter

• Near shelf-incised canyons

Potential locations

HSSW

HSSW

• Kongsberg EM3002 dual head MBES (300kHz system) • RV Howard Burton (8.5 m workboat)

LOCAL SCALE

High-resolution mapping at Davis station, Vestfold Hills

• 42 km2 survey area, up to 300 m water depth

• Bathymetry and backscatter – 2 m grids

Seafloor Features • Lack of glacial features • Extension of onshore landforms • Example 1: Bedrock features

Bedrock outcrops

Onshore

Joints

Dykes

Seafloor Features • Lack of glacial features • Extension of onshore landforms • Example 1: Bedrock features • Example 2: Boulder fields

Hydrodynamics Channels

Sand ribbons

Scours

New Geomorphic and Benthic Habitat Maps

LOCAL SCALE

High-resolution mapping at Casey station, Windmill Islands

• 33 km2

• 1 m grid • 1-161 metres

Basement Features NW trending basement faults • Major fault orientation • Control coastline morphology • Preferentially eroded • Have been mapped onshore

NE-ENE trending ‘channels’ • Erosion of gneissosity of

basement • Control coastline geomorphology

Basement Features

Basement ‘highs’ • Irregular, rugged and variable

topography • Steep knolls forming small shoals

and reefs • Mirror the exposed geomorphology

Glacial Features

Onshore glacial striations

Glacial lineations and drumlins • predominantly ► 270° • Identical to glacial striations

reported onshore (265-280°) • Expanded Law Dome during Late

Pleistocene

Glacial Features Moraines • Mostly small push

moraines (2-3 m high) • Episodic advances in

overall ice retreat • Some larger recessional

moraines (up to 15 m high) • Convex seaward • Located within U-shaped

valleys

Post-glacial marine basins

135m

100m

100m

• ‘Enclosed’ basins and depressions • Post-glacial sedimentation • Target for deglaciation history for

coring • Unknown sediment thickness

CURRENT WORK

Cape Darnley Seafloor Geomorphology

• Important site for Antarctic Bottom Water production

• Oceanography poorly constrained by lack of good bathymetry

Cape Darnley Polynya

“We concluded …there are inherent errors in ...the available bathymetric datasets, in particular the coastal region surrounding Cape Darnley” (Ohshima et al. 2013 – Nat.Geos.)

Cape Darnley Glacial Geomorphology

Ridges - moraines? - GZW?

x

x’

2,4002,2002,0001,8001,6001,4001,2001,0008006004002000

Dep

th (m

)

-130

-135

-140

-145

-150

-155

-160

x x’

y y’

12,00010,0008,0006,0004,0002,0000

Dep

th (m

)

-230

-240

-250

-260

-270

-280

-290

-300

-310

-320

y’ y

Cape Darnley Glacial Geomorphology

Gullies

Iceberg scours

Lineations

Drumlin

Shelf break

Drumlin

Channel?

2016/17 Season Geoscience Australia Activities in Antarctica

1. High-resolution multibeam survey - Davis station

- Extend coverage from 2010

2. RV Investigator voyage – Totten Glacier

- Seafloor habitat mapping

3. Absolute gravity survey – Casey station

- Benchmark ICECAP airborne gravity

4. Geodetic and geophysical monitoring

program – Davis station

Future Directions Replacement Icebreaker

• Due in 2020

• 30 year life

• Full ocean depth multibeam capabilities

ありがとうございます Arigatou gozaimasu

• Thanks to Chris Carson and Alix Post (Geoscience Australia)

• Thanks for Nogi-san for inviting me to Japan and providing the Cape Darnley data

• Thanks to Miura-san for helping with the Cape Darnley interpretations

Questions?

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